Abstract:We studied the regulation of oleic acid synthesis in the PNS. During mouse postnatal development, the proportion of 18:1 rises in the sciatic nerve from 17% at 5 days of age to 33% at 25 days. However, this rise does not occur in the dysmyelinating mutant mouse trembler. In normal mouse development, the total stearoyl-CoA desaturase (SCD) activity measured in sciatic nerve homogenates is high during the first 3 weeks. Yet in trembler nerves, this SCD activity represents only 15% of normal values. Using the RT-PCR technique, we demonstrate that the SCD2 isoform is predominantly expressed in the PNS. Northern blot analysis showed that the mRNA levels for SCD2 parallel those of other specific myelin proteins in both normal mouse and trembler mutant development. Similar experiments in a rat demyelination-remyelination model confirmed that SCD2 mRNA levels are regulated in the PNS in a similar manner to myelin-specific proteins.
The Trembler mouse suffers from a dominantly inherited autosomal mutation that results in an abnormal myelination of the peripheral nervous system. Biochemical studies have shown that dysmyelination is the primary event, demyelination being a late-occurring process. The expression of myelin protein genes has been studied. The steady-state levels for PMP22 mRNA represent 10 and 5% of normal values in the nerves of heterozygous and homozygous Trembler, respectively. This is due to a reduced expression of the specific transcript driven by the promoter 1 of the PMP22 gene. Collective results indicate that Trembler dysmyelination is not necessarily the consequence of a large accumulation of the mutated PMP22 protein. Moreover, it appears that the situation in the Trembler is different from that encountered in most CMT1A patients, where an increased PMP22 gene dosage is responsible for the disease. Therefore, the Trembler mutant is perhaps not an ideal model for this human neuropathy.
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